Bee-cabinet



(No Model.)

P. KOCH.

BEE UABINET.

Patented June 16, 1885.

No. s19,979.

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UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.

PETER KOCH, OF PARKVILLE, MICHIGAN.

BEE-CABINET.

SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters-Patent No. 319,979, dated June 16, 1885.

Application filed November 18, 1884.

To all whom it may concern:

Be it known that I, PETER K0011, a citizen of the United States, residing at Parkville, county of St. Joseph, State of Michigan, have invented a new and useful Bee-Cabinet, of which the following it a specification.

This invention has for its object certain improvements intended to insure greater comfort and safety to the bees and to facilitate the care of them.

In the drawings forming a part of this specification, Figure 1 is a perspective view of a beehive, the door being open, disclosing internal contents; and Fig. 2 is a broken portion of a bee-house and a broken portion of the hive and contents, all in perspective, enlarged, and more fully described below.

The hive B is made in the common rectangular form, having top, bottom, rear, and side inclosures, with a'door, P, in front. The brooding-chamber D is detaehably placed in the hive B, with its rear wall closely in con tact with the rear wall of the said hive, Fig. 2.

R represents the wall of a bee-house, into which the hive,.with its contents, is placed, with the rear wall of the hive closely in contact with the wall of the bee-house.

An opening, S, (one or more,) leads from the brooding-chamber D, through the rear wall thereof, through the rear wall of the hive, and thence through the wall R of the bee house, out into the open air, through which the bees pass in going outdoors and in returning to the brooding-chamber.

F is the floor of the bee-house. The honeylittle above the upper side of the floor a.

(No model.)

boxes 0 c are placed on the broodingehamher, and passages lead from the latter into said boxes 0 c in the usual manner.

The bees are thus kept proof against freezing, theft, or other harm the year round, and 0 the bees have ready and free access to the outside air and blossoming fields at will.

To facilitate moving the brooding-chamber in and out of the hive and to provide for a circulation of air beneaththebrooding-cham- 5 her, I provide the hive with rollers 12 o, buried in the floor, which serve the double purpose of rollers and foundation-supports,which keep the chamber a little above the floor of the hive. These rollers have bearings at each end in the side walls of the bee-hive B, as in Fig. 2, the right-hand ends of the rollers being here shown by portions of the bee-hive being broken away. The periphery of the rollers extends a Having thus described my invention, what I claim, and desire to secure by Letters Patent,

The combination of the brooding-chamber, the hive, and the rollers buried in the floor of the hive, extending a little above the surface of the floor and having end bearings in the side walls of the hive, for the objects set forth.

In testimony of the foregoing I have hereunto subscribed my name in presence of two witnesses.

'PETER KOCH. Witnesses:

J 0s. A. FRANKLIN, A. CAMERON. 

